hyksos

Did Unemployed Minoan Artists Land Jobs in Ancient Egypt?

One of the most perplexing mysteries that Egyptologists and Aegean experts are tackling is that of the frescoes of Tell el-Dab'a, also known as Avaris.

This site was used as the capital of the Hyksos, at a time when they ruled much of Egypt, from 1640 – 1530 BC. It is on the Nile Delta and would have provided access to the Sinai, Levant and southern Egypt.

The site appears to have been abandoned for a time after the Hyksos were driven out. However, by the end of the 18th dynasty (when the Egyptians were back in control of their land), the site was in use and sported with three – yes three – large palaces. They were ringed by an enclosure wall. The whole complex was about 5.5 hectares in size.

%QUOTENow here’s the mystery –

Two of those palaces were decorated, for a very short period of time, with Minoan frescoes. These include drawings of bull-leaping scenes – which are well known from the Palace of Knossos in Crete.

Tell el-Dab'a

Key Dates

Second Intermediate Period (1640-1550 BC) - Used as capital by Hyksos

Rebuilt at some point during 18th dynasty of Egypt

Key People

The Minoan frescoes were painted sometime around the reign of Thutmose III.

Located in the eastern Nile Delta, this site was used as a capital by the Hyksos during the Second Intermediate Period. They were an Asiatic people who controlled part of Egypt during this time. The site is strategically placed, giving whoever controls it access to the Sinai, Levant and southern Egypt.

It was abandoned for a time, after the Hyksos were driven out of Egypt. It was rebuilt during the 18th dynasty of Egypt. It included three palaces, indicating that it was used by Egyptian royalty.  

The most astonishing finds were the Minoan frescoes that decorated two of the palaces. These depict bull-leaping scenes. They are similar in many respects to the frescoes painted at the Palace of Knossos in Crete.

How these frescoes got to Egypt is a mystery. The excavator of the site, Manfred Bietak, has proposed that a Minoan princess got married to a member of the Egyptian royal family. The Minoans sent artists to paint the frescoes as a way to commemorate this wedding.

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Oldest Babylonian Cuneiform Seal Fragment in Egypt Discovered, at Hyksos Capital of Avaris

Cuneiform

Austrian archaeologists have unearthed the oldest cuneiform seal inscription fragment ever found in Egypt. The piece dates to the Old Babylonian reign of King Hammurabi, who brought the world its first code of law, between 1792 - 1750 BC. Egypt's culture minister Farouk Hosni announced the discovery today, made by the Austrian Archaeological Mission in a pit at Tel El-Daba, modern name of ancient Avaris, 120km north-east of Cairo in the Nile Delta.

Thomas Schneider

Thomas Schneider
Professor of Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies - University of British Columbia

Professor Thomas Schneider is a Professor of Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies at the University of British Columbia, in Vancouver Canada.

He holds a Habilitation, Dr. phil, and MA in Egyptology from Basel University in Switzerland.

From 2005 to 2008 he was professor of Egyptology at Swansea University in Wales. From 2001 to 2005 he was a Research Professor  in Egyptology, with the Swiss National Science Foundation.

He has also been a visiting professor at Heidelberg University and the University of Vienna in Austria.

His publications include, Lexicon of the Pharaohs. The ancient Egyptian kings from the earliest times to the Roman Empire and Asian personal names in Egyptian sources of the New Kingdom and Foreigners in Egypt during the Middle Kingdom and the Hyksos.

He has two books coming out in 2010. One is The historian and the Egyptian history. An introduction to Egyptology Historiography. The other is The 101 most important questions: Ancient Egypt.

He is also working on a book on German Egyptology during the Nazi era (1933-1945).
 

Current position

Professor of Classical, Near Eastern and Religious Studies - University of British Columbia

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